Posted by
reasonmclucus on Wednesday, November 26, 2008 3:32:24 PM
November 29 will be the 100th anniversary of the birth of the black
preacher known as
"Mr. Civil
Rights". No, I'm not talking about Rev. Martin Luther King,
Jr., although this man was named after his preacher father.
Rev. Adam Clayton Powell, Jr,
was conducting civil rights demonstrations when Dr. King was still a
child in the 30's. As assistant pastor at his father's
Abyssinian Baptist Church he was in charge of providing food and
clothing to those who couldn't afford them, on one occasion he
even gave the shoes he was wearing to a man who couldn't
find his size in the used clothing.
When he succeeded his
father in 1935 it was the largest Protestant congregation
in America. The church itself began as a
protest against the segregated seating at New York City's
First Baptist Church in 1808. A century later the church would
call Rev. Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., to be its pastor.
Rev.
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., recognized that providing food and clothing
wasn't the best way to help people, so he began an effort to get jobs
for
blacks. His
Coordinating
Committee for Employment used mass protests such as his "Don't Buy
Where You Can't Work" campaign to persuade various businesses,
including Harlem Hospital, to hire more blacks. In
1941 he used a bus boycott to force the hiring of 200 more blacks by
the transit authority. In 1941 he integrated the New
York City City Council when he was elected as its first black
member.
In 1944, he became the first northern black from a state other than
Illinois to be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. Rep.
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., informed Congress: "I'm the first bad
Negro they've had in Congress." The other black Representative,
William
Dawson of Chicago, had avoided challenging the status quo.
Powell promptly integrated the House dining room and barber shop.
He persuaded
other members of Congress to stop using the n- word on the floor of
Congress. He pushed
for an end to segregation in the military and the
District
of Columbia
and invented the "Powell Amendment" which, if successfully attached to
legislation, prohibited racial discrimination in the use of federal
funds. Many years later a similar provision later was
adopted to require equal treatment for women.
Later he played a major role in getting President John Kennedy's
New
Frontier and
President Lyndon Johnson's
Great Society
legislation passed.
Unfortunately, late in his career he succumbed to the temptations to
misuse power and was eventually expelled from Congress for corrupt
activities. Charles Rangel subsequently replaced him.
Powell died on April 4, 1972.
The focus on Dr. Martin Luther King's contributions has obscured
the fact that King didn't start the fight to end segregation, he merely
carried that fight to the south where the resistance was
greatest. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell didn't start the fight
either, but he escalated it. As a preacher he
demonstrated that public protests and boycotts could change the
situation. As a member of Congress he began the difficult
process of changing government racial policies. Perhaps the
military would have been integrated without his efforts, but his
support certainly helped. He forced Presidents Harry
Truman and Dwight Eisenhower to act against racial
discrimination. Powell, a Democrat, later rewarded
Eisenhower by endorsing him in the 1956 presidential
election.
The Supreme Court's decision in
Brown v. Board of Education
didn't happen in a vacuum. Charles Sumner had argued before the
Massachusetts high court that "separate but equal" was impossible a
century earlier in the
Roberts
case which had served as a precedent for the ruling in
Plessy
v. Ferguson. Society had changed, at least outside the
south.
Integration was the coming thing. The nation's principle
government organization, the military, had been integrated as had its
most popular sport, baseball. The justices might have been aware
of Dwight Eisenhower's role in eliminating segregated theaters and
other facilities on military bases and eliminating segregated
facilities in the
District
of Columbia even though Eisenhower had acted quietly.